Showing posts with label Future of Retail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Future of Retail. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Scenarios for sustainability and social equity from Bangalore

Scenario by Sandhya Kumari:

The students from the Bangalore Centre have submitted their final scenarios which they have derived from their explorations in the sectors assigned to them. Farm Fresh produce, Dairy and Poultry products as well a handcrafted Products all to be seen from the supply chain which would support sustainability as well as social equity. A few examples of their scenarios is shown above and below. Scenario visualisation is a critical part of design thinking and action since the imaginations of an individual are shared with many and in the discussions that follow the mental models get refined and updated and the process of development and improvement goes forward. For a more detailed note on Design thinking see the blog post on Design for India and the earlier post on the Design Journey on this blog below.

Scenario by Richa Sharma:

Scenario by Dinesh P:

Scenario by Usha Singh:

Scenario by Chandini Garg:

Friday, September 14, 2007

Models – making meaning, making sense



As our last batch of students (Future of Retail in India) struggled to model and structure the material generated from their brain storming, I began wondering what are the characteristics of good models and what does the process of building them really entail.

Over the years we have worked with many groups of students as they wrestle with the information – it always takes many cycles of doing and redoing, many conversations, disagreements, many cups of chai, late nights and intermittent enthusiasm and despair. Finally it gets done, remarkably or flat – but the learning is always staggering.

This group laboured more than most and so I began questioning what more do they need to know so that they can get a grip on the task.

One of the challenges of being a designer is having to work in unfamiliar areas where one has no background knowledge. One of the ways to overcome this is to model what we know about the subject area through a process of gathering data, structuring the data in several ways, synthesizing and representing it with structure and form. It becomes evident through this process that the mode of structuring the information has bearing on the content and the point of view. While this process helps map the boundaries of the subject area and the relationships between entities within, it also reveals the areas of ignorance and directions for further investigation. In time, it becomes second nature for designers to launch into such a search when confronted with unexplored territory. The assignment is intended for students to experience and apply this process.

Students work in teams. This is an exercise in collaborative meaning making. Increasingly this is also a characteristic of design work. Design tasks that address complex 'wicked' problems call for designers to work in multidisciplinary teams.The experience of developing a shared understanding through the process of building models is a valuable lesson in team work.

Each group was also having its own set of 'team' problems – varying levels of commitment, vocal leaders, silent bystanders, cliques and sub plots, rigidly held positions, resistance to admitting mistakes, communication failure,and so on.

The goal of building a model is seldom to just organize the information and get it all down there. It is really about building a tool, a navigation tool or creating the compass for way finding. So getting it all down – visible in one view, is invaluable because then there is the team's shared understanding of the subject space expressed as an artifact that can be seen and shared with others, expanded, altered, built upon. Good models, while mapping what is also carry the suggestion of what could be. Through emphasis and suppression, inclusion and omission models hold in their belly a point of view.

So what can we share about how good models might be built? New methods will always be built as you go along – this is my bag of tricks

  • Assume Autonomy – so you are at once empowered and responsible, to take charge, obtain information, take decisions, act

  • Yield to the collaborative process – include diverse voices, co-create, 'none of us is smarter than all of us' (Japanese proverb)

  • Listen consciously – drop your defenses, have an open 'don't know' mind, let go old ideas and respond afresh to what is actually there. Question.

  • Get in touch with your core values – they are our organizing principles and will evoke what is of value in the context under consideration, which in turn will be the organizing principles for your structure.

As teachers, i believe we may need to describe at the outset in more detail the sequence of assignments that will follow so that students are clear about the big picture, and do not feel, like some do, that they are marching to a drum beat but to where they do not know.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Future of Retail in India: Some proposals and models at the end of the DCC class

Image: Home Electronics group doing classification>

The three groups worked hard and had a great deal of confusion in their transactions and in what they had to deliver. Finally the three groups came up with an agreed format for presentation and based on this they completed the structure that captured the various macro-micro dimensions of the design situation across each of the three assigned groups namely – Fresh Food, Provisions and Home Electronics – all dealing with looking at the Future of Retail in each of these commodities.

Image: Detail of Food Group structure model


Image: Provisions Group making their presentation


Image: Future of Retail: Fresh Food group


Image: Future of Retail: Provisions group


Image: Future of Retail: Home Electronics group

The groups have then taken on the assignment of building individual scenarios within their groups domain but each would find an area of opportunity that they personally see as both viable as well as necessary. This submission will be digital and be based on an analog image on A3 size paper that is scanned for submission along with a brief description of the design opportunity that is stated in a few words.
 
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